The Rush Fish-Eye Lens: To Sow A New Mentality
When they turn the pages of history
When these days have passed long ago
Will they read of us with sadness
For the seeds that we let grow
We turned our gaze
From the castles in the distance
Eyes cast down
On the path of least resistance—Neil Peart (1977)
August 9, 1974 marks the surreal moment remembered for the curt, farewell wave followed by fingers outstretched with the "V" for victory sign of a crumbled presidency, as number 37 boarded the helicopter to depart his coveted, elected position in disgrace. The evening before, just following his final address to the American nation, Richard Nixon had this brief exchange with Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger: “History is going to record that you were a great president,” Kissinger assured Nixon. “Henry,” the president said, “that will depend on who writes the history.”
The overwhelming power of the youthful Boomers was realized in the 1970s as many iconic “kings” were pressured into making farewell waves: Watergate and the debilitating end of the Vietnam War underscored the influence of journalism to translate popular opinion into action. By the decade’s end, “progress” would be defined in such ways as the overthrow of the Iranian shah by the revolutionary, theocratic regime led by Ayatollah Khomeini, Ronald Reagan’s rise by courting the Religious Right, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s deregulation following Premier James Callaghan’s ‘Winter of Discontent’ (named after Shakespeare’s Richard III). The music industry would also report farewell waves by kingly icons: the disbanding of The Supremes, Led Zeppelin’s final U.S. performances, and the tragic deaths of Elvis Presley, T Rex’s Marc Bolan, members of Lynyrd Skynyrd, and Bing Crosby.
As further evidence of the postmodern confusion in 1977 over what is deemed progressive or primitive, popular culture became fascinated with punk as represented by such groups as The Clash, The Ramones, and the Sex Pistols while also extolling soundtracks to the Studio 54 hedonistic discotheque and Saturday Night Fever celebrity lifestyles as pointing the way to the future. The most popular band of the day, Kiss, and Andrew Lloyd Webber’s blockbuster megamusical portrayal of Eva Perón were just a few examples of trending anti-heroes seeking influence over a mass following.
Another manifestation of postmodern revisionism the mid-1970s was the preoccupation with Renaissance icons and dynamics. This urge to look back with modern eyes and repurpose archetypes, sounds, fashion, etc. perhaps aimed to project Boomer transcendentalism and proselytization.
Byproducts of systemic dysfunction in the 14th century yield alarming lessons for us in our time: The Great Schism (1378-1417), The Black Plague (1346-1353), and the 100 Years War (1337-1453) undermine the hope towards progress invested in religion, technology, and ideology respectively, and can result in unintended monumental disaster when they are implemented as tools for massification. What followed the 14th century was a cultural correction and the period of time was given the name Renaissance. In Ayn Rand’s view, “The Renaissance was specifically the rebirth of reason, the liberation of man's mind, the triumph of rationality over mysticism - a faltering, incomplete, but impassioned triumph that led to the birth of science, of individualism, of freedom.” The resurgence of Renaissance-era style surely expressed the bidding farewell to perceived “kingdoms” built in the post WWI-Vietnam War era for José Ortega Y Gasset’s “mass-man.”
In June of 1977, Rush had just completed a sixteenth-month tour supporting their career-saving project, 2112, and decided to maintain creative momentum on a new project without respite. Their decision to record in Wales perhaps itself invited ideas that were evoking the Renaissance, but certainly the themes they deployed confirmed these impulses. This new material would be released as A Farewell to Kings on September 1, 1977.
The idea binding the material follows: “accepting that the former time ruled by heroic rulers is now passing, we must rediscover a lost capacity to discover between right and wrong.” These songs all examine the consequences of overreach and begin to suggest the reconciliation of the mind and heart with the acceptance of civic responsibility and accountability. A balance can be reached when philosophers, ploughmen, blacksmiths, artists each “plays his part,” thus “sowing a NEW mentality.”
In addition to rhetoric, their own evocation of Elizabethan-age setting was further achieved with the addition of primitive instruments and cover art. Pastoral sounds of birds chirping and nylon-strung guitar are heard in the opening moments of the record, reed-sounding keyboard (moog), percussion such as tubular bells, temple blocks, windchimes, bell tree and even vibra-slap can be found throughout.
Hugh Syme’s album art contains an industrial wasteland (depicted by a midrise apartment block and pylon in the background and a dilapidated building and debris in the foreground) is juxtaposed with the focal image of a marionette puppet dressed as a king, sitting on a burnished throne. A cape thrown over one side of the throne shields the figure from the wasteland, but he has lost his sovereignty: his body has fallen over to the left, his crown on the floor out of reach on the other side of the throne; his costume is awry and ragged; and the marionette strings are seemingly disused – an image reinforced on the reverse of the album cover, where we see red strings descending limply against a black field, without a puppeteer in sight.
In their roles as troubadours, Rush continued to wander the face of the Earth now with the confidence that their unique perspectives on their time were having impact. Interest in creating denser textures and exploring even deeper philosophical areas were presenting even greater challenges for them to pull off as a traveling trio in an FM radio world. Undeterred, they continued progressing forward, boarding the spaceship Rocinante and navigating it towards Cygnus X-1 to get a closer look, and were pulled into their most intense Prog adventure yet….

















